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Feminist Philanthropy Is Essential to Democracy

We are entering a new era for philanthropy—one that centers feminism. With major new commitments by billionaires like Melinda French Gates and MacKenzie Scott, and a host of women’s funding networks like Women Moving Millions and Giving List Women organizing with increasing urgency, the shift could not come at a more vital moment.

Dollars-wise, the need is real: Funding for women and girls, last assessed in 2020 at $8.8 billion, amounts to less than 2 percent of all philanthropic giving, with less than half of 1 percent of all foundation grants going toward women and girls of color.

As a matter of political and policy urgency, global democratic backsliding makes gender equity a crucial investment. With ascending authoritarianism comes inevitable attempts to rollback women’s, reproductive and LGBTQ+ rights. The connection is not coincidental: There is not an authoritarian playbook that does not make gender a core focus.

This installment of Women & Democracy is focused on feminist philanthropy—and the visionary leaders charting new ground to demonstrate exactly what it looks like to fund and mobilize at the intersection of gender and democracy.

Melinda French Gates wrote: “In nearly 20 years as an advocate for women and girls, I have learned that there will always be people who say it’s not the right time to talk about gender equality.” Not here at Ms. And not when it comes to funding a more equitable, more robust democracy.

Women & Democracy is our collaborative series, spearheaded by Ms. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FOR PARTNERSHIPS AND STRATEGY, Jennifer Weiss-Wolf. Each quarter Ms. will publish a new microsite, together with a dedicated partner, that focuses on key issues impacting full and fair representation in our democracy.

  • Backsliding Democracies and Women’s Rights Around the World

    A conversation among Suyén BarahonaRegina TamésChristine RyanRuth Ben-GhiatLaleh Ispahani

    Can a democracy where women have never been equal ever really thrive? How are attacks on democracy tied to gender equity? What can we learn from past fights to protect and expand women’s rights in order to chart a path forward?

  • Backsliding Democracies and Women’s Rights in the U.S.

    A conversation among Alexis McGill JohnsonMelissa MurrayPamela ShifmanJennifer Weiss-Wolf

    Can a democracy where women have never been equal ever really thrive? How are attacks on democracy tied to gender equity? What can we learn from past fights to protect and expand women’s rights in order to chart a path forward?

Aspiring autocrats and patriarchal authoritarians have good reason to fear women’s political participation. [F]ully free, politically active women are a threat to authoritarian and authoritarian-leaning leaders—and so those leaders have a strategic reason to be sexist

Erica Chenoweth

The struggle for democracy and for gender, racial and economic justice is one fight. It’s our fight

Pamela Shifman, president of the Democracy Alliance

Florida is ground zero for what is known among organizers and philanthropists as “boom-and-bust” funding—meaning money flows in during big election cycles and dries up immediately after. Yet organizing is a 24/7 operation.

Quanita Toffie, executive director of Groundswell Action Fund

Feminist philanthropy is about systematically dismantling power imbalances

Alfonsina Peñaloza

Divorcing gender justice from democracy is inconsistent, irrational and unnecessarily expensive. To separate them is to delay success and pay for it many times over.

Shaunna Thomas, co-founder and executive director of UltraViolet

Organizing and social change movements are far ahead of their funders in moving from cooperation to solidarity. To turn back the tide of authoritarianism, philanthropy must follow their lead.

Cristina Uribe, director of the Gender Equity Action Fund

No more single-issue meetings or initiatives that fail to recognize the common threat.

Pamela Shifman, president of the Democracy Alliance

Putting money in the hands of local feminist organizations—who are uniquely positioned to be able to see the complex ways cultures and systems operate in women’s lives—is key

Annie Hillar and Tsitsi Marylin Midzi

We are guided by the belief that democracy can only thrive when it is structured as an inclusive system that distributes power and influence equitably, rewards cross-partisan collaboration, and sustains these outcomes through a robust set of checks and balances.

Taylor Holden, CEO of One for Democracy

The harmful narratives: The Angry Black Woman, The Welfare Queen, The Hypersexualized Jezebel, not only affect the perception and treatment of Black women but also contribute to broader societal inequities by justifying discrimination and limiting opportunities

Tyeshia “Ty” Wilson, chair of the HERitage Giving Fund

Feminist movements need every form of capital to sustain democracy.

Sarah Matsushita, director of communications for the Toronto-based Equality Fund

When Black women move, the whole structure of society moves with them.

Angela Davis

We are making room at the table for allied funders to show up earnestly, move money abundantly, and stand firm at this critical juncture for democracy.

Vanessa Thomas, program manager at the Black Feminist Fund

Feminist philanthropy is helping to channel funding in new ways that give me hope for transformative change.

Erin Rogers, co-director of the Hive Fund for Climate and Gender Justice

To address the gap between the care families need and the dignified jobs care workers deserve, a movement has emerged like never before, building power and political muscle to demand bold public investments.

Anna Shireen Wadia, executive director of the Care for All with Respect & Equity (CARE) Fund

Pro-democracy funders must see attacks to reproductive freedom, LGBTQ liberation and racial justice as attacks to U.S. democracy itself—and fund accordingly.

Julia Reticker-Flynn, director of the Rights, Faith & Democracy Collaborative at Proteus Fund

Donors, no matter their age or giving capacity, [must] view women and girls as a lens, not a lane in philanthropy.

Gwyn Lurie, co-founder and CEO, The Giving List Women